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University of Southern California
DAILY • TROJAN
VOL. LVIII LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1966 NO. 24
Times vs. Topping: a branch in Britain?
USC has definite plans to establish a branch campus in England, reported the Los Angeles Times yesterday.
USC has no definite plans to establish a branch campus in England, countered Dr. Norman Topping.
“The L.A. Times received an Associated Press release from London saying that USC, the University of Chicago and several other universities were interested in establishing schools in Cambridge,” he said. “Actually, this release was a bit of real estate promotion to perhaps get other American schools interested in the Chestnut Theological College in Cambridge, which is no longer being used.”
FUTURE UNKNOWN
The Board of Trustees at Chestnut has not yet decided exactly what will be done with the school, a three-story. U-shaped structure. A vote will determine whether the campus will be sold or leased.
Use of the college was discontinued because its function has been transferred to another unit of the Cambridge complex.
Dr. Topping pointed out that “for USC to establish a campus at Cam-
Phillip Watson slated to speak at tax institute
County Assessor Phillip E. Watson and five other tax experts will discuss the taxation problems of California today in Bovard Auditorium from 9 to 11:30 a.m.. as part of the 19th annual Institute on Federal Taxation.
The main topic of discussion will be the growing significance of property taxation, which may soon rival California's highest, the state income tax.
Sharing the platform with Watson will be James R. Vine, chief deputy assessor, Gerald W. Miller, assistant assessor for Los Angeles County, William C. Miller, certified public accountant, Francis H. O’Neil, attorney, and Thurston H. Ross. Sr., member of the American Institute of Real Estate Appraisers
In addition to real and personal property taxation, the panel will also discuss the significant 1966 legislative changes in California to standardize assessment procedures.
Irving I. Axelrad, Los Angeles attorney, will be the chairman and moderator. He formerly was a special assistant to the attorney general in the tax division of the U.S. Department of Justice.
The Taxation Institute is in its second day of the three-day program sponsored by the USC Law Center.
bridge, a great deal of planning would be involved. Arrangement would need to be made with, for instance, LAS to provide a worthwhile program for students. A faculty would need to be secured. And how many students would be interested in studying in England and able to afford the expenses?”
It is true, however, that a USC official went to England to survey the old campus, but outside of that, USC has made no attempt to secure the facility.
The Chestnut Theological College in Cambridge was founded in 1768 by the countess of Huntingdon to train
clergy for Protestant Evangelical churches. The present structure was built in 1913 as an adjunct to the original school.
Should USC secure the old school, it would operate in a manner similar to USC's present overseas campus in Vienna. Austria. Several students and faculty members travel there each summer for a combined program of travel and study.
The interest of other colleges in the Chestnut school results from the increasing trend toward full-year overseas study programs sponsored by major universities across the country.
BETH ADAAAS Beauty contest winner
Coed wins beauty title number 7
Playboy's Hugh Hefner may have overlooked USC coeds, but the Star of America Beauty Pageant judges haven't.
Beth Adams, a senior in music, was crowned Miss Star of America, adding to her six previous beauty titles.
Miss Adams was also first runner-up in the Star of the World pageant held in New York. She sang a folk song and played her guitar, besides singing with the orchestra in her talent competition.
Among her gifts was a Star of America ring, a 15-carat Linde Star Ruby. She also received a Universal Studios contract as Miss Star of California.
Miss Adams made several personal appearances on television and radio, in addition to meeting New York's Mayor Lindsey and other dignitaries.
The Torrance beauty also plays the piano. She has 13 private students in music and has been an organist in her church for the past five years.
Titles won earlier in her career include Miss Marines. Miss Hawthorne. Miss Redondo Beach. Miss Los Angeles County. Miss Bathing Beauty of the Year and Miss Star of California.
She also participated in the last Rose Parade and was featured on | ABC's “Dating Game” program.
Miss Adams plans to work on her M.A. degree in pipe organ performance after graduation.
Sponsors for the Star of America pageant are the Union Carbide and Proctor and Gamble Companies.
Chinas Red Guard a crazy nightmare
Youths in Communist China perpetrating the Red Guard movement have been compared by some to the restless student activists on American college campuses today.
Madame Chiang Kai-Shek, in a speech Wednesday, did not agree, but instead called the Red Guard a “frenetic nightmare in a convulsion on the mainland'' which naay make Peiping the ultimate key in forming w'orld peace.
Madame Chiang spoke before a joint World Affairs Council-Town Hall luncheon in the Beverly Hilton Hotel's International Ballroom.
She cited the attempts of the zealous Red Guard in their “cultural revolution” as an attempt to save face “for the humiliation suffered in the Boxer Uprising of 1900.”
Madame Chiang arrived in Los Angeles Tuesday night aboard a Nationalist Chinese Air Force plane, concluding a year-long visit to the United States.
She also spoke on the subject of Peiping dominance of Hanoi and the Vietnam War. “The United States has with infinite patience and an ever-smiling visage favored every gratuit-
ous insult from the Chinese Communists,” she said.
“But the grandiose desire for world Communist domination by the Red Chinese leaders, makes timid tractibility unworkable,” she added.
Madame Chiang told the audience that Peiping wrants the Vietnam War to continue as part of its plan for world revolution.
Discussing the break between the world's two large Communist powers, the wife of Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek said this enmity brings about a problem with geo-political dimensions
“Communist China, on Russia's southeastern border, will be a constant irksome threat and headache to the Kremlin, for Russia has found to her chagrin that China cannot be made a satellite,” Madame Chiang explained.
Madame Chiang emphasized that China has ceased to be the dumb, burly errand boy who answers every bid of its older brother, Russia.
“In addition,” she added, “the growth of Communist China keeps alive a reminder to the satellite nations that there is an alternative to Russian domination.”
AAA DAME CHIANG AT BEVERLY HILTON She has no love for Red Guard or "cultural revolution"
SCHOLARS, PROFESSORS
Three named to fill administrative posts
Three scholars have been named to fill departmental administrative posts.
Wesley Eugene Bjur has been named director of the International Public Administration Center.
Preston N. Silbaugh is the new chairman of the Youth Studies Cen-^ ter Advisory Council.
Dr. Robert M. Chew is acting chairman of the Department of Biological Sciences.
Bjur succeeds Theodore H. Thomas, who has been named assistant dean of the School of Public Administration.
Bjur will administer a program that trains foreign students in the techniques and teaching of public administration. He will also teach foreign students.
An ordained minister of the Assembly of God Church, Bjur spent 11 years in Chile, where he served on the governing board and faculty of the Seminario ^Biblico de las Asam-
bleas de Dios de Chile, lecturing on religion, philosophy and psychology.
Silbaugh, a financier, lawyer and former member of Gov. Brown's cabinet, is president and chairman of the board of the Beverly Hills Federal Savings and Loan Association.
“The USC Youth Studies Center is finding ways of effectively controlling delinquency and crime. The center is in need of financial and community support,” he said.
“I am honored to participate in the center’s vital work. The task is urgent; the time to move is now.”
Dr. Chew, who took office Oct. 15, will serve until a permanent chairman is appointed. He will also continue to teach and conduct research in desert community ecology under a National Science Foundation grant.
A graduate of Washington and Jefferson College. Dr. Chew received M.A. and Ph.D. degrees at the University of Illinois. Before coming to USC in 1952, he taught for several years at Lawrence College.
I
PROGRESS MOVES ON—Bulldozers are a significant monster is breaking ground for the new Stu-sian of USC's Master Plan. This noisy, dust-raising dent Activities Center, next to the Student Urnon.
GOP candidate to inaugurate analysis of '66 election issues
Election Analysis 66. a w’eek spotlighting the issues and candidates of November's state-wide election, gets underway today with GOP candidate for State Controller. Houston I. Flournoy's speech at noon in Hancock Auditorium.
Flournoy, a supporter of gubernatorial candidate Ronald Reagan, is known to California voters as a three-trrm assemblyman from Claremont, and to PomoQ.? College students as an assistant professor of government.
As his basic philosophy. Flournoy has declared. “It is in the interest of protecting the individual freedoms of citizens of this country that the state governments be maintained as the primary governmental agency, in cooperation with the local governments.”
In his recent campaigning. Flournoy has attacked the office of inheritance tax appraiser by pointing out
ID's A MUST FOR ALL GAMES
In order to keep saboteurs from entering the rooter and curd stunt sections, photo II*'s and rooter tickets will he required for admission to the student section at Saturday's game with Clemson.
These must be presented at the cates and tunnH entrances to the Coliseum.
This policy will also be in force for all succeeding home games.
MADAM CHIANG
Flournoy has received the endorsement of the Republican Council of California and the support of more than 75% of his GOP colleagues in the Assembly.
Prior to his election to the Assembly, he was a research assistant in the New Jersey State Legislature and legislative assistant to U.S. Sen. H. Alexander Smith of New Jersey.
Sponsored by the Political Science Department of Pi Sig^a Alpha and campus political organizations, Election Analysis ’66 is scheduled to present Thomas Braden, president of the State Board of Education on Friday, and Nobert Schlei, Democratic candidate for secretary of state on Monday. Two faculty panels will also be presented next wreek—Foreign Policy and the 1966 Election and Parties, Politics and Issues in the 1966 Election—along with a debate presented by the Blackstonians, a pre-law society, on “To Ban or Not to Ban: Proposition 16.”
FORMS DUE FOR HELEN TITLE
Applications for the 1966 Helen of Troy contest are still available to junior and senior women in the YWCA office. The deadline for returning the application and the $2 fee is tomorrow at 3 p.m.
Interviews will begin Oct. 25, and following three elimination judgings, a court of five will be announced. The queen will be selected Nov. 7 at a banquet at the Beverly Hillcrest Hotel. All applicants should sign up for a judging time at the YWCA.
that the present controller’s political machine of inheritance tax appraisers. siphons off over S3 million from the estates of those who die.
“No public official, including myself. should have such a plush fund to distribute to his political friends at the expense of the taxpayers,” he said.
Candidate Flournoy proposes to substitute a self - appraisal program which will save the inheritance taxpayers thousands of dollars by eliminating politics from the system.
Flournoy maintains that it is dangerous and absurd to propose that all control over our schools must be centralized in Sacramento to relieve the taxpayer. “Control over schools must remain at the local level.”
HOUSTON 1. FLOURNOY State controller candidate

University of Southern California
DAILY • TROJAN
VOL. LVIII LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1966 NO. 24
Times vs. Topping: a branch in Britain?
USC has definite plans to establish a branch campus in England, reported the Los Angeles Times yesterday.
USC has no definite plans to establish a branch campus in England, countered Dr. Norman Topping.
“The L.A. Times received an Associated Press release from London saying that USC, the University of Chicago and several other universities were interested in establishing schools in Cambridge,” he said. “Actually, this release was a bit of real estate promotion to perhaps get other American schools interested in the Chestnut Theological College in Cambridge, which is no longer being used.”
FUTURE UNKNOWN
The Board of Trustees at Chestnut has not yet decided exactly what will be done with the school, a three-story. U-shaped structure. A vote will determine whether the campus will be sold or leased.
Use of the college was discontinued because its function has been transferred to another unit of the Cambridge complex.
Dr. Topping pointed out that “for USC to establish a campus at Cam-
Phillip Watson slated to speak at tax institute
County Assessor Phillip E. Watson and five other tax experts will discuss the taxation problems of California today in Bovard Auditorium from 9 to 11:30 a.m.. as part of the 19th annual Institute on Federal Taxation.
The main topic of discussion will be the growing significance of property taxation, which may soon rival California's highest, the state income tax.
Sharing the platform with Watson will be James R. Vine, chief deputy assessor, Gerald W. Miller, assistant assessor for Los Angeles County, William C. Miller, certified public accountant, Francis H. O’Neil, attorney, and Thurston H. Ross. Sr., member of the American Institute of Real Estate Appraisers
In addition to real and personal property taxation, the panel will also discuss the significant 1966 legislative changes in California to standardize assessment procedures.
Irving I. Axelrad, Los Angeles attorney, will be the chairman and moderator. He formerly was a special assistant to the attorney general in the tax division of the U.S. Department of Justice.
The Taxation Institute is in its second day of the three-day program sponsored by the USC Law Center.
bridge, a great deal of planning would be involved. Arrangement would need to be made with, for instance, LAS to provide a worthwhile program for students. A faculty would need to be secured. And how many students would be interested in studying in England and able to afford the expenses?”
It is true, however, that a USC official went to England to survey the old campus, but outside of that, USC has made no attempt to secure the facility.
The Chestnut Theological College in Cambridge was founded in 1768 by the countess of Huntingdon to train
clergy for Protestant Evangelical churches. The present structure was built in 1913 as an adjunct to the original school.
Should USC secure the old school, it would operate in a manner similar to USC's present overseas campus in Vienna. Austria. Several students and faculty members travel there each summer for a combined program of travel and study.
The interest of other colleges in the Chestnut school results from the increasing trend toward full-year overseas study programs sponsored by major universities across the country.
BETH ADAAAS Beauty contest winner
Coed wins beauty title number 7
Playboy's Hugh Hefner may have overlooked USC coeds, but the Star of America Beauty Pageant judges haven't.
Beth Adams, a senior in music, was crowned Miss Star of America, adding to her six previous beauty titles.
Miss Adams was also first runner-up in the Star of the World pageant held in New York. She sang a folk song and played her guitar, besides singing with the orchestra in her talent competition.
Among her gifts was a Star of America ring, a 15-carat Linde Star Ruby. She also received a Universal Studios contract as Miss Star of California.
Miss Adams made several personal appearances on television and radio, in addition to meeting New York's Mayor Lindsey and other dignitaries.
The Torrance beauty also plays the piano. She has 13 private students in music and has been an organist in her church for the past five years.
Titles won earlier in her career include Miss Marines. Miss Hawthorne. Miss Redondo Beach. Miss Los Angeles County. Miss Bathing Beauty of the Year and Miss Star of California.
She also participated in the last Rose Parade and was featured on | ABC's “Dating Game” program.
Miss Adams plans to work on her M.A. degree in pipe organ performance after graduation.
Sponsors for the Star of America pageant are the Union Carbide and Proctor and Gamble Companies.
Chinas Red Guard a crazy nightmare
Youths in Communist China perpetrating the Red Guard movement have been compared by some to the restless student activists on American college campuses today.
Madame Chiang Kai-Shek, in a speech Wednesday, did not agree, but instead called the Red Guard a “frenetic nightmare in a convulsion on the mainland'' which naay make Peiping the ultimate key in forming w'orld peace.
Madame Chiang spoke before a joint World Affairs Council-Town Hall luncheon in the Beverly Hilton Hotel's International Ballroom.
She cited the attempts of the zealous Red Guard in their “cultural revolution” as an attempt to save face “for the humiliation suffered in the Boxer Uprising of 1900.”
Madame Chiang arrived in Los Angeles Tuesday night aboard a Nationalist Chinese Air Force plane, concluding a year-long visit to the United States.
She also spoke on the subject of Peiping dominance of Hanoi and the Vietnam War. “The United States has with infinite patience and an ever-smiling visage favored every gratuit-
ous insult from the Chinese Communists,” she said.
“But the grandiose desire for world Communist domination by the Red Chinese leaders, makes timid tractibility unworkable,” she added.
Madame Chiang told the audience that Peiping wrants the Vietnam War to continue as part of its plan for world revolution.
Discussing the break between the world's two large Communist powers, the wife of Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek said this enmity brings about a problem with geo-political dimensions
“Communist China, on Russia's southeastern border, will be a constant irksome threat and headache to the Kremlin, for Russia has found to her chagrin that China cannot be made a satellite,” Madame Chiang explained.
Madame Chiang emphasized that China has ceased to be the dumb, burly errand boy who answers every bid of its older brother, Russia.
“In addition,” she added, “the growth of Communist China keeps alive a reminder to the satellite nations that there is an alternative to Russian domination.”
AAA DAME CHIANG AT BEVERLY HILTON She has no love for Red Guard or "cultural revolution"
SCHOLARS, PROFESSORS
Three named to fill administrative posts
Three scholars have been named to fill departmental administrative posts.
Wesley Eugene Bjur has been named director of the International Public Administration Center.
Preston N. Silbaugh is the new chairman of the Youth Studies Cen-^ ter Advisory Council.
Dr. Robert M. Chew is acting chairman of the Department of Biological Sciences.
Bjur succeeds Theodore H. Thomas, who has been named assistant dean of the School of Public Administration.
Bjur will administer a program that trains foreign students in the techniques and teaching of public administration. He will also teach foreign students.
An ordained minister of the Assembly of God Church, Bjur spent 11 years in Chile, where he served on the governing board and faculty of the Seminario ^Biblico de las Asam-
bleas de Dios de Chile, lecturing on religion, philosophy and psychology.
Silbaugh, a financier, lawyer and former member of Gov. Brown's cabinet, is president and chairman of the board of the Beverly Hills Federal Savings and Loan Association.
“The USC Youth Studies Center is finding ways of effectively controlling delinquency and crime. The center is in need of financial and community support,” he said.
“I am honored to participate in the center’s vital work. The task is urgent; the time to move is now.”
Dr. Chew, who took office Oct. 15, will serve until a permanent chairman is appointed. He will also continue to teach and conduct research in desert community ecology under a National Science Foundation grant.
A graduate of Washington and Jefferson College. Dr. Chew received M.A. and Ph.D. degrees at the University of Illinois. Before coming to USC in 1952, he taught for several years at Lawrence College.
I
PROGRESS MOVES ON—Bulldozers are a significant monster is breaking ground for the new Stu-sian of USC's Master Plan. This noisy, dust-raising dent Activities Center, next to the Student Urnon.
GOP candidate to inaugurate analysis of '66 election issues
Election Analysis 66. a w’eek spotlighting the issues and candidates of November's state-wide election, gets underway today with GOP candidate for State Controller. Houston I. Flournoy's speech at noon in Hancock Auditorium.
Flournoy, a supporter of gubernatorial candidate Ronald Reagan, is known to California voters as a three-trrm assemblyman from Claremont, and to PomoQ.? College students as an assistant professor of government.
As his basic philosophy. Flournoy has declared. “It is in the interest of protecting the individual freedoms of citizens of this country that the state governments be maintained as the primary governmental agency, in cooperation with the local governments.”
In his recent campaigning. Flournoy has attacked the office of inheritance tax appraiser by pointing out
ID's A MUST FOR ALL GAMES
In order to keep saboteurs from entering the rooter and curd stunt sections, photo II*'s and rooter tickets will he required for admission to the student section at Saturday's game with Clemson.
These must be presented at the cates and tunnH entrances to the Coliseum.
This policy will also be in force for all succeeding home games.
MADAM CHIANG
Flournoy has received the endorsement of the Republican Council of California and the support of more than 75% of his GOP colleagues in the Assembly.
Prior to his election to the Assembly, he was a research assistant in the New Jersey State Legislature and legislative assistant to U.S. Sen. H. Alexander Smith of New Jersey.
Sponsored by the Political Science Department of Pi Sig^a Alpha and campus political organizations, Election Analysis ’66 is scheduled to present Thomas Braden, president of the State Board of Education on Friday, and Nobert Schlei, Democratic candidate for secretary of state on Monday. Two faculty panels will also be presented next wreek—Foreign Policy and the 1966 Election and Parties, Politics and Issues in the 1966 Election—along with a debate presented by the Blackstonians, a pre-law society, on “To Ban or Not to Ban: Proposition 16.”
FORMS DUE FOR HELEN TITLE
Applications for the 1966 Helen of Troy contest are still available to junior and senior women in the YWCA office. The deadline for returning the application and the $2 fee is tomorrow at 3 p.m.
Interviews will begin Oct. 25, and following three elimination judgings, a court of five will be announced. The queen will be selected Nov. 7 at a banquet at the Beverly Hillcrest Hotel. All applicants should sign up for a judging time at the YWCA.
that the present controller’s political machine of inheritance tax appraisers. siphons off over S3 million from the estates of those who die.
“No public official, including myself. should have such a plush fund to distribute to his political friends at the expense of the taxpayers,” he said.
Candidate Flournoy proposes to substitute a self - appraisal program which will save the inheritance taxpayers thousands of dollars by eliminating politics from the system.
Flournoy maintains that it is dangerous and absurd to propose that all control over our schools must be centralized in Sacramento to relieve the taxpayer. “Control over schools must remain at the local level.”
HOUSTON 1. FLOURNOY State controller candidate